My school is r3v
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And you are going to be in school/residency for 9 more years...?
my desired career path would put me past your earnings in fewer years...
And people look like Paper Mario right now... time for bars ttyl bebeLeave a comment:
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Well, you just showed your immense lack of education - bashing the medical field.
WTF is an HMO company? lol
My major? Radiology. Double check the pay of a radiologist really quick and get back w/ me.Leave a comment:
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Yeah...
good luck on being a paper pusher in a NPO health care org... that'll get you places. Like the cubicle down the row. What are your career aspirations? Running your own HMO company?? puuhleaze. What's your major you are studying anyway?
What you claimed to have posted was the average wage for college graduates. Which was false. It does not make what you posted correct because it was also the average starting salary of a B.S. liberal arts major as I posted. The average college graduate career wage is higher than the average career wage of a bachelor degree'd graduate. And the average salary earned by a college graduate is higher than their average starting salary.
The point you seem to be missing is even the bullshit major bachelor's degree starting salary is as high as the average full time pay of a high school graduate! Not to mention higher paid majors like engineering, career average salaries, or professional degrees...
Luck plays a role in all people's lifes. But smart decisions can improve the chances of a positive outcome. No one can predict the trends of industry success or demand shocks in the economy, but improving one's skill set and being ready for what comes will improve one's luck.Last edited by rwh11385; 12-07-2007, 04:02 PM.Leave a comment:
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How is this structured into sentences? Is How supposed to be a start of a new sentence or part of the one before it?Unless you have a specific job that you apply your major to every day. How would a college education help someone who does what I do? Say I am a District manager and sell product to a large do it youself warehouse?
Keep in mind what I said earlier about forward progression to a director spot. How would it help a new hire?
English composition can help anyone communicate better with the people they deal with, and courses on public speech can help in meetings with subordinates. Business law can teach about how to avoid being screwed by not understanding UCC or contract law. Teamwork/organizational behavior can give tips to better guiding people working under you, as can experience in student organizations help. Probability can help enhance ability to deal with odds that are involved with business, and understanding finances, accounting, distribution could be helpful as well. Psychology can help one understand how others think and react.
The bottom line is college hopefully teaches people some useful pieces of information, but moreover teaches them how to learn, so that employers know they can handle advancement. Just because you get an entry-level job out of college and work for several years does not mean you have potential to move up, where being able to learn advanced and conceptual topics may show that.
In addition, personal growth and development are a vital part of college. An opportunity to find oneself outside of parents and before the workplace can make a person ready to deal with others on their own without seeking parental guidance or questioning themselves. Not to mention good networking can be achieved in college.
A new hire can use college, like Charlie said, as a multi-year project in which they handled tasks and for sales, hopefully one has examples in the other half of college to retell. A lot of education takes place outside the classroom, which is why it's not always the major that matters the most, but what you really get out of school. At the Tech School, dirty jokes and harassing one another is the lesson outside of the book, but in real schools it may be meeting a deadline or working with others.Last edited by rwh11385; 12-07-2007, 03:57 PM.Leave a comment:
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Or...teach. Some of us do, or want to do that.
Or design the cars you want to be working on...a lot of those guys have engineering degrees.
Etc...etc.
Interesting comparison.
Do the other students tear you an asshole as bad as R3v does?Last edited by Miatamania; 12-07-2007, 03:43 PM.Leave a comment:
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Like I said - say what you want - because I'll always be more successful than you. You proved it earlier in your stats.and yet you say "College doesn't do shit", incorrectly post figures for wage gaps, and attempt to mislead readers on the amount of successful HS dropouts and misfortune of college grads.
no matter how a few people can be able to not go to college, and be successful, and how some aren't lucky after college, you cannot devalue the better chances you get with a post-secondary education. trying to make an argument out of outliers is moronic.
IIRC you posted the same stats as i did regarding wage for liberal arts majors...
If you think "luck" has anything to do with it you are wrong.Leave a comment:
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Unless you have a specific job that you apply your major to every day. How would a college education help someone who does what I do? Say I am a District manager and sell product to a large do it youself warehouse?
Keep in mind what I said earlier about forward progression to a director spot. How would it help a new hire?Leave a comment:
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and yet you say "College doesn't do shit", incorrectly post figures for wage gaps, and attempt to mislead readers on the amount of successful HS dropouts and misfortune of college grads.
no matter how a few people can be able to not go to college, and be successful, and how some aren't lucky after college, you cannot devalue the better chances you get with a post-secondary education. trying to make an argument out of outliers is moronic.Leave a comment:
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dude, have you met my Mom? She's 60 - if granny style is your thing . . .Leave a comment:
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Lack????
Your mom would seriously argue with you on that one!
OOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOo
BurnzzzzzzzzLeave a comment:

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